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Syrian President To Visit France In His First Trip To Europe

Sharaa, who will hold talks with French President Emmanuel Macron, received an exemption from the United Nations to travel to Paris as he remains on a terrorism sanctions list.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa is set to travel to Paris on Wednesday, marking his first visit to Europe since Bashar al-Assad’s removal in December. The trip aims to seek international backing for his efforts to restore stability to his country ravaged by years of conflict.

Sharaa, who will hold talks with French President Emmanuel Macron, received an exemption from the United Nations to travel to Paris as he remains on a terrorism sanctions list for his previous leadership of Islamist armed group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a former al Qaeda affiliate.

The two leaders will discuss how to ensure Syria’s sovereignty and security, the handling of minorities after recent attacks against Alawites and Druze, counter-terrorism efforts against Islamic State terrorists and the coordination of aid and economic support, including an easing of sanctions, French officials said.

“It is clear that given the immense challenges facing Syria, there are expectations of support from France and from Syria’s major international partners,” said a French presidency official, adding that Paris was not naive about the Syrian President’s past jihadist links and continued to have demands for the transition.

International Support For Syria

“There is a clear role for the international community to play in Syria to enable its stabilisation.”

France welcomed Assad’s fall and has increasingly fostered ties with Sharaa’s transitional authorities. Macron recently held a trilateral video meeting with Sharaa and Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun as part of efforts to ease tensions on the border.

France last month appointed a charge d’affaires in Damascus with a small team of diplomats as a step towards fully reopening its embassy.

Paris believes it has a card to play in Syria, having cut ties with Assad in 2012 and having refused thereafter to restore ties with his government even after opposition fighters were badly defeated and confined to northern pockets of the country.


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It traditionally backed a broadly secular exiled opposition and Kurdish forces in northeastern Syria, where it already has special forces.

France’s Role

Over the past months France played an intermediary role between Sharaa and the Kurds as the United States began reducing its presence and the new Syrian leader looked to bring the area back under centralised control from Damascus.

A French presidency official said Paris had been holding talks with the Americans on how to handle Washington’s withdrawal and how France could play a bigger role.

With the World Bank estimating reconstruction costs in Syria at more than $250 billion, the Syrian President is in desperate need of sanctions relief to kickstart an economy battered by 14 years of civil war. During that period the U.S., the European Union and Britain imposed tough sanctions on the Assad government.

The EU has lifted some sanctions, while some others that target individuals and entities are due to expire on June 1.

Syria hopes the EU will not renew those measures. Their renewal needs consensus among all 27 member states, although the bloc could opt for a limited renewal or delist key institutions such as the Central Bank or other entities that are needed for economic recovery, including energy, infrastructure, finance.

“One of the fundamental issues is the question of U.S. sanctions, which continue to weigh on the capacity of the transitional authorities to be able to enter a mind frame of reconstruction and attract foreign investment,” the French presidency official said.

(With inputs from Reuters)